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A study of the spatial structure of the atmospheric boundary layer with a Doppler-Sodar network

The studies conducted in 1991–2004 by scientists of the A.M. Obukhov Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Russian Academy of Sciences, and the Karpov Institute of Physical Chemistry yielded data on the structures of the surface air layer (to a height of 20 m) and both subinversion and inversion layers...

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Published in:Izvestiya. Atmospheric and oceanic physics 2009-10, Vol.45 (5), p.541-548
Main Authors: Granberg, I. G., Kramar, V. F., Kuznetsov, R. D., Chkhetiani, O. G., Kallistratova, M. A., Kulichkov, S. N., Artamonova, M. S., Kuznetsov, D. D., Perepelkin, V. G., Perepelkin, V. V., Pogarskii, F. A.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:The studies conducted in 1991–2004 by scientists of the A.M. Obukhov Institute of Atmospheric Physics, Russian Academy of Sciences, and the Karpov Institute of Physical Chemistry yielded data on the structures of the surface air layer (to a height of 20 m) and both subinversion and inversion layers (to heights of from 800 m to 1 km), where arid aerosol is transported. One of the main objectives of the 2007 experiment was to record the space-vortex structures within a layer of 30–700 m that directly provide the removal and long-range transport of fine-dispersed (
ISSN:0001-4338
1555-628X
DOI:10.1134/S0001433809050016